| Literature DB >> 31963155 |
Khaled AbouAitah1,2, Agata Stefanek3, Iman M Higazy4, Magdalena Janczewska3, Anna Swiderska-Sroda1, Agnieszka Chodara1,5, Jacek Wojnarowicz1, Urszula Szałaj1,5, Samar A Shahein6, Ahmed M Aboul-Enein6, Faten Abou-Elella6, Stanislaw Gierlotka1, Tomasz Ciach3, Witold Lojkowski1.
Abstract
Targeted drug delivery offers great opportunities for treating cancer. Here, we developed a novel antiEntities:
Keywords: colon cancer cells and spheroids; delivery system for cancer targeting; folic acid; hydroxyapatite nanocarrier; in vitro release kinetics; nanoformulations; natural products; pH-sustained release effect; piperine alkaloid prodrug
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963155 PMCID: PMC7022489 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12010070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Scheme 1Schematic representation of preparation steps for the proposed delivery system using the natural prodrug of piperine and HAPs to target colon cancer cells in monolayer and spheroids.
Figure 1Field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM) at different stages. (A) Synthesized HAPs, (B) HAPs functionalized with phosphonate, (C) Pip loading, (D) GA coating, and (E) FA conjugation.
Figure 2(A) Particle size measured by DLS for all prepared materials at different stages before and after loading, coating, and conjugation. (B) Zeta potential measurements in PBS under different pH conditions for all prepared materials at different stages before and after loading, coating, and conjugation.
Figure 3(A) The N2 adsorption isotherms for prepared materials at different stages before and after loading, coating, and conjugation. (B) The pore diameter distribution for prepared materials at different stages before and after loading, coating, and conjugation.
Physicochemical properties of HAP before and after surface modification, Pip loading, coating, and conjugation.
| Sample | SBET (m2/g) a | Total Pore Volume b (cm3/g) | Mean Pore Size Diamter c (nm) | Weight Loss % wt. d | Weight Content % wt. e |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAP | 222 ± 3 | 0.815 | 12.8 | 10.69 ± 0.65 | - |
| HAP-P | 143 ± 3 | 0.501 | 11.6 | 11.46 ± 0.40 | 0.77 as P |
| HAP-Pip7.2 | 108 ± 3 | 0.372 | - | 28.78 ± 2.32 | - |
| HAP-P-Pip7.2 | 78 ± 3 | 0.356 | - | 31.76 ± 1.01 | - |
| HAP-Pip-9.3 | 83 ± 3 | 0.358 | 10.8 | 29.94 ± 0.89 | - |
| HAP-P-Pip 9.3 | 81 ± 3 | 0.358 | 10.4 | 31.30 ± 0.31 | - |
| HAP-Pip9.3-GA | 56 ± 3 | 0.231 | 11.2 | 31.83 ± 0.61 | 1.89 as GA |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA | 79 ± 3 | 0.354 | 11.7 | 31.72 ± 0.62 | 0.42 as GA |
| HAP-Pip9.3-GA-FA | 70 ± 3 | 0.165 | 9.4 | 32.01 ± 1.45 | 0.18 as FA |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA | 61 ± 3 | 0.294 | 9.3 | 31.89 ± 1.16 | 0.17 as FA |
a Specific surface area measurement. b Pore volume from nitrogen adsorption measurements at 0.999 P/P°, c Mean size distribution based on the Brunauer–Emerett–Teller method, d,e Calculated from the thermogravimetric analysis.
Figure 4Simultaneous thermal analysis (STA) coupled with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and mass spectroscopy (MS) for all prepared materials at different stages before and after loading, coating, and conjugation. (A) Weight loss by STA, (B) DSC, and (C) DTG. (D,E) MS of water (D) and carbon dioxide (E) content.
Figure 5XRD patterns of select samples before and after Pip loading and of free Pip prodrug. The analysis was done based on the powder of prepared samples.
Figure 6Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) spectra of HAPs before and after surface modification (A), after Pip loading at different pH compared to free Pip (B), before and after GA coating (C), and before and after FA conjugation (D).
The total drug loading capacity (TLC) and entrapment efficiency (EE) of piperine using UV–vis and TGA methods.
| Nanoformulation | TLC (%) | EE (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UV Method | TG Method | UV Method | TG Method | |
| HAP-Pip7.2 | 16.82 ± 3.52 a | 18.08 ± 2.60 cd | 77.42 ± 3.2 ce | 72.33 ± 10.41 cd |
| HAP-P-Pip7.2 | 20.14 ± 4.87 a | 18.71 ± 0.90 bd | 74.98 ± 2.60 e | 74.83 ± 3.61 bd |
| HAP-Pip9.3 | 22.49 ± 2.97 a | 20.31 ± 1.00 a | 79.97 ± 0.85 bc | 81.23 ± 3.98 a |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3 | 21.26 ± 3.17 a | 19.84 ± 0.59 a | 80.75 ± 3.33 e | 79.36 ± 2.36 a |
| HAP-Pip9.3-GA | 17.32 ± 5.49 a | 19.55 ± 0.59 ab | 77.90 ± 1.26 be | 78.20 ± 2.36 ab |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA | 18.75 ± 1.33 a | 19.58 ± 0.59 ab | 76.58 ± 1.0 de | 78.32 ± 2.36 ab |
| HAP-Pip9.3-GA-FA | 17.27 ± 2.39 a | 18.15 ± 0.59 d | 85.05 ± 1.79 a | 72.60 ± 2.36 d |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA | 19.47 ± 1.20 a | 19.44 ± 0.59 abc | 78.61 ± 2.2 bcd | 77.76 ± 2.36 abc |
The letters (a,b,c,d, etc.) demonstrate the significant differences based on ANOVA analysis by means of lest significant differences (LSD) values at p < 0.05 between groups. The different letters show the significance, while the same letters show no significance.
Figure 7The solubility of Pip, HAP, GA, and FA in PBS at different pH. (A) pH 7.4, (B) pH 6.8, and (C) pH 5. Data is presented as mean ± SD.
Figure 8In Vitro release of Pip from PBS under different pH conditions. (A) HAP-Pip9.3-GA, (B) HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA, (C) HAP-Pip9.3-GA-FA, and (D) HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA. Data is presented as mean ± SD.
Figure 9Cell viability of monolayer HCT116 colon cancer cells after treatment with HAPs a HAP-Ps for 24 h (A), 48 h (B), and 72 h (C). The red asterisk (*) indicates significant (p < 0.05) differences between HAPs and HAP-Ps at the same concentration. The black asterisk (*) indicates significant differences between concentrations. The black asterisk (****) indicate very high significant differences between concentrations. NS, not significant. All data are expressed as mean ± SD.
Cytotoxicity of HAPs and HAP-Ps on the cell viability (%) of HCT116 spheroids.
| Concentration (µg/mL) | HAP | HAP-P |
|---|---|---|
| 48 h | ||
| 12 ** | 90.16 ±6.9 | 110.7 ±5.0 |
| 37 ** | 96.09 ±14.8 | 117.05 ±1.3 |
| 111 ** | 78.29 ±9.6 | 107.56 ± 12.0 |
| 333 ** | 88.18 ±6.4 | 91.74 ±7.0 |
| 1000 ** | 78.69 ±6.9 | 88.58 ±5.0 |
|
| ||
| 12 | 129.2 ±12.7 | 129.2 ±9.7 |
| 37 | 122.1 ±17.2 | 122.1 ±19.0 |
| 111 | 130.8 ±15.6 | 130.8 ±14.0 |
| 333 | 125.7 ±11.4 | 125.7 ±11.6 |
| 1000 | 120.7 ±6.7 | 120.7 ±4.3 |
** Significant difference (p = 0.0049) between concentrations at 48 h. No significant difference was observed between HAP and HAP-P at 48 or 72 h.
Figure 10Cell viability (%) of monolayer HCT116 colon cancer cells in the presence of prepared nanoformulations and free Pip. The cells were treated at different concentrations and incubated for 24 h (A), 48 h (B), and 72 h (C). A red asterisk (*) indicates significant (p < 0.05) differences between nanoformulations and free Pip, whereas a black asterisk (*) indicates significant differences between nanoformulations. NS, not significant. A black asterisks (****) indicate very significant differences. All data are expressed as mean ± SD.
Anticancer effect based on mean cell viability (%) in HCT116 spheroids.
| Concentration (µg/mL) | Treatment | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAP-Pip7.2 | HAP-P-Pip7.2 | HAP-Pip9.3 | HAP-P-Pip9.3 | HAP-Pip9.3-GA | HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA | HAP-Pip9.3-GA-FA | HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA | Pip | |
|
| |||||||||
| 2.4 | 118.7 ± 14 | 170.4 ± 9 | 93.2 ± 10 | 116.5 ± 8 | 105.2 ± 8 | 106.6 ± 2 | 95.9 ± 5 | 78.4 ± 26 | 110.9 ± 8 |
| 7.4 | 110.9 ± 32 | 135.4 ± 17 | 85.4 ± 10 | 81.7 ± 9 | 112.2 ± 6 | 90.7 ± 19 | 104.8 ± 14 | 88.8 ± 33 | 113.0 ± 6 |
| 22 | 117.7 ± 25 | 153.3 ± 48 | 97.6 ± 16 | 103.2 ± 11 | 107.5 ± 9 | 95.2 ± 2 | 136.2 ± 14 | 79.1 ± 12 | 102.6 ± 11 |
| 66 | 112.0 ± 19 | 142.5 ± 19 * | 104.8 ± 21 | 106.3 ± 14 | 114.5 ± 18 | 75.0 ± 4 | 155.2 ± 26 * | 71.8 ± 14 | 102.8 ± 19 * |
| 200 | 93.2 ± 17 | 141.7 ± 16 * | 85.6 ± 11 | 86.0 ± 8 | 109.2 ± 10 | 105.2 ± 13 | 170.2 ± 19 * | 107.5 ± 18 * | 90.5 ± 13 * |
|
| |||||||||
| 2.4# | 94.2 ± 8 | 87.6 ± 7 | 108.0 ± 15 | 121.0 ± 25 | 111.4 ± 17 | 108.4 ± 7 | 105.4 ± 6 | 103.9 ± 7 | 125.9 ± 11 |
| 7.4# | 85.8 ± 4 | 86.9 ± 11 | 103.9 ± 4 | 104.9 ± 8 | 105.1 ± 53 | 106.7 ± 11 | 85.9 ± 7 | 105.2 ± 4 | 133.4 ± 9 |
| 22# | 90.0 ± 12 | 88.1 ± 3 | 99.8 ± 12 | 99.3 ± 12 | 93.2 ± 4 | 106.7 ± 7 | 86.9 ± 12 | 100.7 ± 15 | 132.5 ± 12 |
| 66# | 79.6 ± 30 * | 83.0 ± 9 * | 104.2 ± 23 * | 98.8 ± 2 * | 78.4 ± 7 * | 106.0 ± 9 * | 58.1 ± 15 * | 89.4 ± 6 * | 125.5 ± 19 * |
| 200# | 91.9 ± 6 | 67.4 ± 4 * | 74.8 ± 13 * | 70.3 ± 7 * | 56.2 ± 6 * | 78.1 ± 11 * | 53.8 ± 8 * | 54.2 ± 9 * | 125.2 ± 12 * |
We found a significant difference (p < 0.0001) between all treatments at 48 h and 72 h. # indicates significant difference (p < 0.0001) between concentrations at 72 h. * Significant difference between Pip and nanoformulation treatments at the same concentration (we selected 66 µL and 200 µL) due to multi-comparisons being difficult to present in a table.
Figure 11Anticancer effects in monolayer HCT116 colon cancer cells observed by field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM). The cells were treated with 200 µL of HAPs and HAP-Ps and select nanoformulations. Cells were incubated for 72 h. Untreated cells were used as controls and visualized at different magnifications, from 5 to 25 KX. Scale bar = 1 and 2 µm in control cells. Treated cells were visualized at a magnification of 5KX. Scale bar = 2 µm.
Figure 12Anticancer effects in HCT116 colon cancer cell spheroids observed by inverted microscopy. The cells were treated with 200 µL of HAPs and HAP-Ps and select nanoformulations. Cells were incubated for 48 h and 72 h. Untreated cells were used as controls. Scale bars = 100 µm.
Figure 13Cellular uptake observation by SEM and SEM-EDS elemental analysis mapping in monolayer HCT116 colon cancer cell treated at 100 µL and incubated for 48 h with HAPs (A,a), HAP-Ps (B,b), HAP-Pip9.3-GA (C,c), HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA (D,d), HAP-Pip9.3-GA-FA (E,e), and HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA (F,f). Yellow color in elemental mapping images show the presence of both calcium and phosphorus (main components of HAP nanoparticles). Red dots correspond to calcium, and green dots to phosphor. Blue color is due to silicon present in the cover glass used for culture cells. Scale bar = 10 µm.
Summary of the results for various piperine (Pip) delivery methods.
| Piperine Delivery Method | Structure | Solubility and Release Kinetics | Targeting Specifications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pip (free form) |
| Higher solubility in PBS at acidic pH 5 than 6.8, 7.4, and 9. | Moderate cytotoxicity towards normal WI-38 cells. Weak activity against HCT116 colon cancer cells (monolayer and spheroids). Not effective. Non-targeting for colon. |
| HAP-Pip or HAP-P-Pip—Pip-loaded HAP not modified or modified with phosphonate. Loading at pH 7.2 and 9.3 |
| Short-term release. Release 100% of Pip capacity ~36 h (pH 6.8) and 24 h (pH 5). | Moderate cytotoxicity towards normal cells. High anticancer effect on monolayer colon cancer cells but not spheroids. Not enough cancer targeting. No change in cell morphology in monolayer or spheroids. |
| HAP-P-Pip9.3-GA-FA—Pip-loaded HAP modified with phosphonate, coated with gum Arabic, and conjugated to folic acid |
| Long-term release. Release 100% of Pip capacity ~84 h (pH 6.8) and 72 h (pH 5). | Less cytotoxicity. High anticancer effect with full inhibition of monolayer HCT116 cells and ~60% inhibition for spheroids. High cancer-targeting of monolayer and spheroid HCT116 cells. Cancer targeting through folate receptors. Cell morphology changes: smaller size, shrinkage, and defragmentation of spheroids. |